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Extra To Protagonist-Chapter 146: Memory (3)
Chapter 146: Memory (3)
The King didn’t blink.
Didn’t speak again right away either.
Just sat there, eyes narrowed slightly, gaze locked onto Merlin like a craftsman sizing up a flawed blade and trying to decide where to start breaking it down.
He leaned back into the bone-carved throne.
Then raised one hand.
Not high. Just a few inches.
The room shifted.
It didn’t tilt. Didn’t rumble.
The pressure didn’t announce itself.
It arrived.
A stillness that locked the air tight in Merlin’s throat before he could brace for it.
His lungs worked. But less efficiently now.
Like they were being choked through water.
’Mana pressure. Not just mana. Will.’
It bore down from every angle.
Not like a storm, but like the weight of history remembering it hates you.
His knees wobbled.
The girl beside him didn’t look up.
The guards at the edge of the room didn’t flinch.
This wasn’t unusual.
This was... protocol.
Merlin gritted his teeth.
His body screamed. Not in pain. In refusal. The borrowed bones he stood in weren’t made for this. Whoever lived this life had stood here once, and nearly folded.
He felt it now.
All of it.
The ache under the kneecaps. The heat behind the eyes. The subtle tremor in the ribs.
The pressure was real.
The system pinged.
[The King Below applies Domain Pressure.]
[Stability Threshold: 34%]
[Collapse Imminent.]
[The Smiling Witness leans forward.]
[The Devourer shifts.]
[The Messenger is silent.]
’Don’t fall. Don’t fall. Don’t fall.’
But his legs were folding again. Slow. Like a structure built wrong from the base.
The King finally spoke.
"You wear that skin poorly."
It wasn’t a condemnation. It was an observation.
"You’re not Rethan."
Merlin froze.
’Rethan.’
That name wasn’t in his memory. Not his own, anyway.
But the moment it touched his ears, something in his blood tightened.
Like being called by something older than name.
The pressure shifted.
Sharper now. Focused.
"You hold yourself like a coward," the King said. "But your numbers say otherwise."
He rose from the throne.
No announcement.
No guards.
Just a figure descending three steps like gravity never asked him to bend.
Merlin locked his jaw and stayed upright.
Barely.
The King stopped two feet away.
Up close, his presence peeled back the skin of the world.
He didn’t glow.
He didn’t flare.
He just existed too much in one place.
He tilted his head.
"You think the gods gave you your power?"
’No,’ Merlin thought. ’No, I don’t. But the boy I’m walking in probably did.’
"Rethan," the King said again, testing the name like it was a curse he’d spat too many times before.
"You’re not a weapon yet. But the shape’s right."
The girl beside them hadn’t moved.
Still kneeling.
Still watching.
Like she knew the script.
The King stepped closer.
"One test."
He raised a hand.
Snapped his fingers.
And something shifted.
The air twitched.
A shimmer in space.
A figure emerged across the room.
Same size. Same shape.
Merlin blinked.
It was him.
No. Not him.
The boy.
The real Rethan.
Wearing the same clothes. Same stance. But no thought in the eyes.
Just motion.
And rage.
The copy lunged.
Fast.
The King stepped back without looking.
The girl rolled sideways.
Merlin had no weapon. freewёbnoνel-com
Only instinct.
He ducked low, catching the swipe of a blade that hadn’t been there a moment before.
He didn’t think.
He remembered.
A twist. A drop. A strike across the ribs. Elbow up. Palm slam to the throat.
The copy choked. Recoiled.
Then surged again.
It wasn’t a spar.
It was a purge.
The King’s voice cut through the room.
"Show me if you deserve that name."
Merlin felt the mana break free in his chest.
Not cast.
Not called.
Just released.
He moved faster.
The copy slammed him into the wall. He kicked back, rolled under, swept the leg.
Blocked.
Countered.
Slashed.
Blocked again.
Each strike stripped away more of the illusion.
Of the memory.
Of what this was.
He wasn’t fighting to survive.
He was fighting to remember.
To live what Rethan had endured.
The copy finally staggered.
One step.
Then fell to one knee.
Merlin didn’t deliver a final blow.
He just stood there.
Breathing like a man who hadn’t had lungs five minutes ago.
The King clapped.
Once.
Sharp.
Not mocking.
Just confirmation.
[System Ping: Gate Three – Survive the Self]
[Result: Passed]
[Marked: Inheritor of Rethan]
[Observer Count: 71]
[The King Below speaks no further.]
The copy vanished.
The room dimmed.
Merlin stood alone again.
The girl had vanished.
So had the throne.
So had the King.
Only the platform remained.
And a door behind it.
He didn’t ask how it got there.
He walked.
Because the only thing left behind now...
Was the man whose life he’d just been told to carry.
And he wasn’t done reliving it yet.
—
He walked. Not fast. The fight had carved too much out of his legs, and whatever adrenaline was in this body didn’t know where to settle.
Every joint still buzzed. His knuckles stung. His shoulder ached from where the projection had clipped it.
’So he fought like this. Rethan. He survived this. Barely.’
The door in front of him was a plain stone slab. No handle. No lock. But when he reached for it, the stone peeled aside with the sound of dragging stoneware. Not magical. Just built. Just old.
Beyond it, another hallway. But this one was different.
Torches lit it, actual flame, not runes. The heat tickled the hair on his arms. The air smelled faintly of salt, metal, and oil. Not rot. Not ritual.
He wasn’t alone anymore either.
Two guards stood ahead, armored, armed, and very alive. They didn’t point weapons. But they didn’t wave him through either.
The one on the left grunted. "He’s late."
The other shrugged. "They always are."
The first one looked Merlin up and down, then barked, "Move it. He doesn’t like waiting."
Merlin opened his mouth. Thought about it. Then closed it again.
’Don’t blow it. Don’t try to figure them out. Just get to the next piece.’
He followed them.
This hall turned, narrowed. The ceiling arched lower than before, torchlight casting thicker shadows. It bent left twice, then straightened into a wider landing.
Here the doors were tall. Oak, bound in bronze. Burned with a crest: a downward-pointing triangle framed by broken chain links. Not religious. Not ornamental. It felt institutional.
The guard pounded the door once with his knuckle.
Someone inside called, "Let him in."
The voice was male. Young. Clipped. Tired.
The guards stepped aside. One opened the door. Neither followed him in.
Merlin entered.
The room wasn’t large. Rectangular. One desk. No throne this time. No dais. Just a man standing at a wide window, both hands resting on the sill.
He didn’t turn when Merlin came in.
"You took your time."
Merlin said nothing. The man kept staring out the window. The glass was warped, thick and old, but clear enough to show what was beyond: a cliffside. Ocean below. Not blue. Not calm. Gray and impatient.
The man spoke again. "Sit."
One chair. Wooden. Scarred down one leg. Merlin sat.
Only now did the man turn.
He wasn’t old. Mid-thirties, maybe. Not in armor, just dark robes pulled tight across the shoulders. Black hair, grown a little too long.
Circles under his eyes. Face clean-shaven but not clean. He looked like someone who’d led too many battles and slept through none of them.
"You’re Rethan."
It wasn’t a question.
Merlin nodded once.
"You passed the gate."
Another nod.
The man studied him. Not like he was weighing a threat. More like he was trying to match Merlin’s face to a sketch that didn’t exist.
"You don’t look like a prodigy," he said.
’Thanks.’
"I’m High Warden Sarris. That still means something, for now. You’re under my direct review for placement."
Merlin sat up a little straighter. Didn’t say anything.
Sarris went to the desk. Picked up a small book. Flipped it open with a lazy thumb. Didn’t seem to read, just let the pages fall.
"They said your mana hit triple baseline. No channel training. No runic exposure. No background. That true?"
"I guess."
Sarris gave him a dry look. "You guess?"
"I didn’t measure it myself."
Sarris shut the book. "You don’t talk much."
"No."
He came around the desk and leaned on the edge. Arms crossed.
"You know what we do here, Rethan?"
Merlin didn’t answer. That wasn’t new. He waited.
Sarris kept going.
"We aren’t raising heroes. We aren’t sculpting leaders. We don’t teach tactics. We don’t teach codes."
’This is sounding familiar.’
"We sort. And we sharpen."
Silence.
"You’re not a student. You’re a blade."
He walked past Merlin, one slow circuit around the chair.
"And before we sharpen a blade, we test its core. See if it bends. Or breaks."
"I didn’t break."
"Yet."
The window behind the desk rattled as wind pushed hard from the cliff. Sarris glanced toward it. Then leaned down to Merlin’s level.
"Why are you here?"
"I didn’t have a choice."
"That’s not what I asked."
Merlin stared forward.
The lie was already on his tongue.
But it didn’t land.
Sarris didn’t give him the space to offer it.
"Everyone here starts without a choice. But the ones who survive—they choose to stay."
Merlin looked at him. For the first time, really looked.
There was no cruelty in the man’s face. Just exhaustion.
Sarris stood straight. "Your scores say you’ll survive. But that’s not why I pulled you from the dorm line."
Merlin blinked. "Then why?"
"Because I don’t need another weapon. I need someone who remembers what pain is."
Sarris grabbed something from the desk. Tossed it.
Merlin caught it by instinct.
A tag.
Metal. Scorched. Letters half-melted.
A name. Barely legible.
Not his.
Not Rethan’s.
Just someone who didn’t make it.
"You want to know how long you’ll last?" Sarris asked.
Merlin nodded.
"Long enough to forget what that name meant."
The door opened behind them. The guards were back.
"Put him in sector four," Sarris said. "Straight into first rotation."
Merlin stood.
No protest.
No question.
Just walked.
Because this wasn’t a test anymore.
It was a life.
And he had to live it, one step at a time.
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